inauguratory 
inauguratory (in-a'gu-ra-to-ri), a. [= Pg. in- 
(iiKjitriitnrio: as inaugurate + -wry.] Pertain- 
ing or suited to inauguration. 
After so many inauguratory gratulations, nuptial 
hymns, and funeral dirges, he must be highly favoured by 
nature, or by fortune, who says any thing not said before. 
Johnson, Dryden. 
inauratet (in-a'rat), r. t. [< L. inauratus, pp. 
of iiinnrare (> It. inaurare), cover or overlay 
with gold, < in, on, + aurare, cover with gold, 
?ild, <aurum, gold: see auratei. Cf. deaurate.] 
o cover with gold; gild. E. Phillips, 1706. 
inaurate (in-a'rat), . [< L. inauratus, pp.: 
see the verb.] If. Covered or seeming to be 
covered with gold; gilded; gilt. Maunder. 
2. In en tow., having metallic golden luster, as 
strife, punctures, fovese, and depressed margins 
in certain Coleoptera. 
inaurationt (in-a-ra'shon), n. [< inaurate + 
-ion.] The act or process of gilding or overlay- 
ing with gold. 
Some sort of th eir induration, or gilding, must have been 
much dearer than ours. Arbuthnot, Anc. Coins. 
inauspicatet (in-as'pi-kat), a, [< L. inauspi- 
catus, without auspices, with bad auspices, un- 
lucky, < in- priv. + auspicatus, pp. of auspicari, 
consecrate by auspices: see auspicate.] Ill- 
omened; unlucky. 
With me come burn those ships inauspicate; 
For I Cassandra's ghost in sleep saw late. 
Vicars, tr. of Virgil (1632). 
inauspicious (in-as-pish'us), a. [< in- 3 + au- 
spicious.] Not auspicious; ill-omened; un- 
lucky; unfavorable: as, an inauspicious time. 
0, here 
Will I set up my everlasting rest, 
And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars 
From this world- wearied flesh. 
Shak., R. and J., v. 3. 
It was with that inauspicious meaning in his glance that 
Hollingsworth first met Zenobia's eyes, and began his in- 
fluence upon her life. Hawthorne, Blithedale Romance, iv. 
=Syn. Unpropitious, unpromising, untoward, 
inauspiciously (in-as-pish'us-li), adv. In an in- 
auspicious manner; unluckily; unfavorably. 
The regicide enemies had broken up what had been so 
inautpiciiiuxly begun and so feebly earned on. 
Burke, A Ilegicide Peace, iii. 
inauspiciousness (in-as-pish'us-nes), . The 
quality of being inauspicious; unfavorableness. 
Jiailcy, 1727. 
inauthoritative (in-a-thor'i-ta-tiv), a. [< in-3 
+ authoritative.] Having no authority ; unau- 
thoritative. 
inauthoritativeness (in-ft-thor'i-ta-tiy-nes), . 
The quality or state of being inauthoritative or 
without authority or commission. [Rare.] 
I furnished them not with precarious praters, ... in 
whom ignorance and impudence, inability and inauthori- 
tativeness, contend which shall be greatest. 
Bp. Gaudcn, Tears of the Church, p. 53. 
We cannot close the volumes without being struck with 
the general looseness and absence of all regard for author- 
ity which pervade them. This should not be. . . . Far- 
reaching interests will not excuse inauthoritaticeness. 
Nature, XXXVII. 442. 
in banco (inbang'ko). [ML.: L.,in,on; ML. 
bancus, bench : see banki, bench.] In full bench ; 
at a session where a quorum of all the judges 
are present, as distinguished from a branch of 
the court. A trial in banco is one held before a number 
of judges for the sake of greater deliberation, so that ques- 
tions arising may be determined at once by a consultation 
of the full bench. Also in bane, en bane. 
inbarget (in-barj'), v. t. [< i-2 + bargei.] To 
cause to embark, as on a barge or bark. 
Whither his friends she caused him to inbarge. 
Drayton, Miseries of Queen Margaret. 
inbarn (in-barn'), r. t. [< in-i + barni.] To 
deposit in a barn. 
A fair harvest, . . . well inned and inbarned. 
Herbert, Priest to the Temple, xxx. 
inbassett, " A Middle English variant of em- 
hassade. 
inbeamingt (in'be-ming), n. [< in- 1 + beam- 
ing.] The ingress of light ; irradiation. 
And, for all these boastings of new lights, inbeamings, 
and inspirations, that man that follows his reason, both in 
the choice and defence of his religion, will find himself 
better led and directed by this one guide than by an hun- 
dred Directories. South, Works, IV. vii. 
inbearing (in'bar-ing), a. [< in-i + leurinu. 
Cf . overbearing.] Officious ; meddlesome. Ja- 
niii-fton. [Scotch.] 
Then out it speaks an auld skipper, 
An inbeariny dog was hee 
" Ye've stay'd ower lang in Noroway, 
Spending your king's monie." 
Sir Patrick Spent (Child's Ballads, III. 340). 
inbeatt, ?. t. [ME. inbeten; < in-i + beaft.] To 
beat in. 
3030 
Thenne with a barre Mete it, batte It ofte, 
And playne it rough. 
Palladium, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S)> p. IBS. 
inbeing (in'be-ing), n. [< in- 1 + being.] In- 
herence ; inherent existence. 
When we say the bowl is ... round, . . . the boy is ... 
witty, these are proper or inherent modes ; for they have 
a sort of inbeing in the substance itself, and do not arise 
from the addition of any other substance to it. 
Watts, Logic, I. 2. 
inbent (in'bent), a. [< in- 1 + lent 1 .] Bent or 
turned inward. 
Inbent eyes 
Can scarce discern the shape of mine own pain. 
Sir P. Sidney (Arber's Eng. Garner, I. 550). 
I can distinguish no regular markings on the inbent sur- 
faces of the radials between the spines. 
Geol. Jour., XLV. 1. 152. 
inbind (in-bind'), v. t. ; pret. and pp. inbound, 
ppr. inbinding. [= D. inbinden = G. einbinden 
= Dan. indbinde = Sw. inbinda; as in-i + bind.] 
To bind or hem in ; inclose. 
On the green banks which that fair stream inbound 
Flowers and odours sweetly smiled and smelted. 
Fairfax. 
inblandt, v. t, [ME. inblanden (= Dan. ind- 
blande = Sw. inblanda, intermingle, inter- 
sperse); < in- 1 + blandi.] To mingle; blend. 
Wyth chynne & cheke ful swete, 
Bothe quit & red in-blande. 
Sir Gaitayne and the Green Knight (E. E. T. $.\ L 1205. 
inblownt (in'blon), a. [< in-i + bloumi.] Blown 
into. Cudwortlt, Intellectual System, I. iii. 29. 
inboard (in'bord), adv. [< i + board.] 1. 
Within the hull or interior of a ship or boat; 
also, in the middle part of the hold of a ship : 
as, stow the freight well inboard. 2. Within 
the rail or bulwarks ; toward or nearer to the 
center: as, to draw the sail inboard. 
inboard (in'bord), a. [< inboardj adv.] 1. In 
the interior of a ship or boat ; being within the 
hull or hold: as, inboard cargo: opposed to out- 
board. 
New bulkheads and inboard works, new spars, rigging, 
sails, and boats, were added. 
C. F. Hall, Polar Exped., p. 29. 
2. Not projecting over the rail or bulwarks : 
as, an inboard spar or sail. 
inbond (in'bond), a. [< in-i + bond*.] In 
arch., laid length- 
wise across a wall, 
as a brick or stone ; 
formed in whole or 
partof materials so 
laid, as a wall : op- 
posed to outbond, 
where the brick or 
stone is laid with 
its length parallel 
to the face of tho 
wall. Inbond and out- 
bond bricks or stones 
are called respectively 
headers and stretchers. 
See tondl, 12. 
[L.: in, in; bonis, abl. of 
incalculable 
inbreaking (in'bra-king), n. [< in-i + break- 
ing.] The act of breaking in; incursion; in- 
vasion ; inroad. [Rare.] 
inbreathe (in-breTH'), v. t.; pret. and pp. in- 
breathed, ppr. inbreathing. [< ME. inbrethen; 
< in-i + breathe.] To infuse by breathing; com- 
municate by inspiration. 
Sphere-born harmonious sisters. Voice and Verse, 
\Ved your divine sounds, and mix'd power employ, 
l)ead things with inbreathed sense able to pierce. 
Milton, Solemn Musick, 1. 4. 
inbred (in'bred),j>.. [Pp. of inbrced.] 1. Pro- 
duced or developed within ; innate ; inherent ; 
intrinsic : as, inbred modesty or good sense. 
His face and carriage 
Seem to declare an in-bred honesty. 
Fletcher, Spanish Curate, H. 2. 
No natural, inbred force and fortitude could prove equal 
to such a task. Bacon, Physical Fables, ii., Kxpl. 
2. Bred in-and-in. =8yn, 1. Innate, Ingrained, etc. 
See inherent. 
inbreed (in'bred or in-bred'), v. t. [Also im- 
breed; < in- 1 + breed.] 1. To breed, generate, 
or develop within. 
To inbreed in us this generous and christianly reverence 
one of another, Milton, Church-Government, ii. 
2. To breed from animals of the same parentage 
or otherwise closely related; breed iu-and-in. 
inburning (in'ber-ning), a. [< in-i + burning.] 
Burning within. 
Her inburning wrath she gan abate. 
Spenser, F. (J., IV. viii. 17. 
inburst (in'berst), n. [< in-i + burst.] A burst- 
ing in from without; an irruption : opposed to 
outburst. [Rare.] 
Let but that accumulated insurrectionary mass find en- 
trance, like the infinite inburst of water. 
Carlyle, French Rev., I. vii. 9. 
inby, inbye (in'bi), adv. [< ini + 6l.] To- 
ward the interior; nearer to; specifically, in 
coal-mining, toward the interior of a mine, and 
away from the shaft or other place where the 
surface is reached : the opposite of outby. Also 
in-over. To go Inby, to go from the door toward the 
^re. Jamieson. (Scotch.) 
inca (ing'ka), n. [Sometimes written ynca; = 
F. inca, incas = It. inca, < Sp. Pg. inca, < Peruv. 
inca (see def. 1).] 1. One of the princes or 
rulers who governed Peru or one of its divisions 
previous to the Spanish conquest. 2. [cap.] A 
member of the dominant tribe in Peru previous 
to the Spanish conquest. 3. In ornith.: (a) A 
name of Leadbeater's cockatoo (Cacatua lead- 
beateri) of Australia, having the crest red, yel- 
low, and white. (6) [NL.] The technical spe- 
cific name of various birds: used only with a ge- 
neric term, (c) [cap.] [NL.] A genus of terns or 
sea-swallows, Sterninte, related to the noddies, 
Inbond and Outbond Wall. 
A, header ; B, B, stretchers. 
in bonis (in bo'nis). 
bona, q. v. Cf. bonus, boon 3 .] In goods ; in re- 
spect of his goods. 
inborn (in'born), a. [< in-i + born 1 .] 1. In- 
nate; implanted by nature. 
I cannot make yon gentlemen ; that's a work 
Rais'd from your own deservings; merit, manners, 
And in-born virtue does it. 
Fletcher (and another"!), Nice Valour, v. 3. 
An inborn grace that nothing lacked 
Of culture or appliance. 
W hittier, Among the Hills. 
2f. Native; aboriginal. 
The hills ... on everie side with winding in and out 
mounted up aloft, and were passable for none but the in- 
born inhabitants that knew the wayes verie well. 
Holland, tr. of Ammianus (1609). 
= Syn. 1. Innate, Inbred, etc. See inherent. 
inbreadt, v. t. [< in-i + breadi (tr. ML. im- 
jinnnre: see impanc).] To embody in bread; 
impanate. Varies. 
We must believe that He Cometh down again at the 
will of the priests to be impaned or inbreaded for their 
bellies' commonwealth. lip. Bale, Select Works, p. 206. 
in-breadt, . The extra piece or number of a 
bakers' dozen. See bakers' dozen, under baker. 
inbreak (in'brak), n. [= D. inbreuk = G. ein- 
bruch; as in-i + break.] A sudden, violent in- 
road or incursion ; an irruption : opposed to 
outbreak. [Rare.] 
Deshuttes and Varigny, massacred at the first inbreak, 
have been beheaded. Carlyle, French Rev., I. vii. 10. 
He saw that he had cleared the way for the inbreak of 
materialist scepticism, which he loathed. 
The American, IX. 136. 
Inca Tern (Jnca ntystacatis). 
having dark plumage with a bundle of white 
curly plumes on each side of the head. The only 
species is Sterna inca (Lesson), now Inca mysta- 
calis ( Jardine). See Nania. (d) A bird of this 
genus. 4. [cap.] [NL.] A genus of scara- 
bseoid beetles, comprising a number of large 
robust Mexican and Central and South Ameri- 
can forms, usually of a reddish-bronze color, 
flying actively at midday and frequenting flow- 
ering trees. Serrillc, 1825. 5. A name given 
about 1850 to some varieties of alpaca cloth. 
Inca dog, a kind of South American dog, unlike any of 
the canines peculiar to that country, and supposed to be 
derived from the Mexican wolf. 
Incad8et(iug'ka-de), n.pl. [NL.,< Inca + -ado?.] 
A family of lamellicorn beetles, taking name 
from the genus Inca. Burmeister, 1842. 
incage, ''. t. See encage. 
incalculability (in-kal"ku-la-biri-ti), n. [< IH- 
fitlculttble : see -liiliti/.] The quality of being 
incalculable, or indeterminable by calculation. 
The one set of machines are characterized by their cal- 
culability the other by their incalculability. 
B. Sterrart, Cons, of Energy, p. 159. 
incalculable (in-kal'ku-la-bl), a. [= F. incal- 
culable = Sp. incalculable = Pg. incalculavel = 
